Definitions
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 5th Edition.
- noun A short cluster of elongated strands, as of yarn, hair, or grass, attached at the base or growing close together.
- noun A dense clump, especially of trees or bushes.
- intransitive verb To furnish or ornament with tufts or a tuft.
- intransitive verb To pass threads through the layers of (a quilt, mattress, or upholstery), securing the thread ends with a knot or button.
- intransitive verb To separate or form into tufts.
- intransitive verb To grow in a tuft.
from The Century Dictionary.
- noun A green knoll. See
toft . - noun A grove; a plantation; a clump.
- To beat up (a thicket or covert) in stag-hunting.
- To separate or combine into tufts.
- To affix a tuft to: cover or stud with tufts, or as if with tufts.
- In upholstery, to draw together (a cushion or an upholstered covering) by passing a thread through it at regular intervals, the depressions thus produced being usually covered with tufts or buttons.
- To grow in tufts; form a tuft or tufts.
- noun A bunch of soft and flexible things fixed at the base with the upper part loose, especially when the whole is small: as, a tuft of feathers.
- noun A turban.
- noun A crest.
- noun An imperial.
- noun In anat, a rete; a glomerulus. See cut under
Malpighian . - noun In botany, a fascicle of flowers on their several partial peduncles; a cluster of radical leaves; a clump or tussock of stems from a common root, as in many grasses and sedges; hence, any analogous bundle.
- noun An undergraduate who bears a title: so called from the tuft worn on his cap to indicate his rank.
from the GNU version of the Collaborative International Dictionary of English.
- noun A collection of small, flexible, or soft things in a knot or bunch; a waving or bending and spreading cluster.
- noun A cluster; a clump.
- noun Cant, Eng. A nobleman, or person of quality, especially in the English universities; -- so called from the tuft, or gold tassel, on the cap worn by them.
- intransitive verb To grow in, or form, a tuft or tufts.
- transitive verb To separate into tufts.
- transitive verb To adorn with tufts or with a tuft.
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License.
- noun A
bunch offeathers ,grass orhair , etc., held together at thebase . - noun A
cluster ofthreads drawn tightly throughupholstery , amattress or aquilt , etc., tosecure andstrengthen thepadding . - noun A small
clump oftrees orbushes . - noun historical A gold
tassel on the cap worn bytitled undergraduates at English universities. - noun A person
entitled to wear such a tassel. - verb transitive To
provide ordecorate with a tuft or tufts. - verb transitive To
form into tufts. - verb transitive To secure and strengthen (a mattress, quilt, etc.) with tufts.
- verb intransitive To be formed into tufts.
from WordNet 3.0 Copyright 2006 by Princeton University. All rights reserved.
- noun a bunch of feathers or hair
- noun a bunch of hair or feathers or growing grass
Etymologies
from The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, 4th Edition
from Wiktionary, Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License
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Examples
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-- B. togeanensis Sody, 1949: the largest species, it has sparser, shorter body than B. babyrussa and, in contrast to B. celebensis, the tail tuft is well developed.
The many babirusa species: laissez-faire lumping under fire again Darren Naish 2006
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-- B. togeanensis Sody, 1949: the largest species, it has sparser, shorter body than B. babyrussa and, in contrast to B. celebensis, the tail tuft is well developed.
Archive 2006-08-01 Darren Naish 2006
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When boys are first shaved generally in the second or third year, a tuft is left on the crown and another over the forehead; but this is not the fashion amongst adults.
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ABOUT five years ago, fome men working in a quarry of that kind of ftone which in this part of the country we call tuft ■ *, at about five or fix feet below the furfiice,, in a very Iblid part of the rock, met with feveral fragments of the horns and bones of one or different animals.
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I remember seeing these as a little girl...oh and the tuft is the end of the little girl's ponytail I think
Inappropriate, Much? Jen 2008
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I didn't recognize him sitting in the choir stall at first; what caught my attention was his biretta's distinctive blue tuft, which is proper to the Institute.
Archive 2008-11-09 papabear 2008
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I didn't recognize him sitting in the choir stall at first; what caught my attention was his biretta's distinctive blue tuft, which is proper to the Institute.
Saturday at St. Albert's papabear 2008
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This little tuft, which is altogether white, is the Hyperborean Hills.
Five books of the lives, heroic deeds and sayings of Gargantua and his son Pantagruel 2002
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This little tuft, which is altogether white, is the Hyperborean Hills.
Five books of the lives, heroic deeds and sayings of Gargantua and his son Pantagruel 2002
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The head is shaved, except a straight tuft, which is allowed to grow.
Insulinde: Experiences of a Naturalist's Wife in the Eastern Archipelago 1887
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